Yearbook of Comparative Criticism, Volume 10Joseph Strelka |
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Page 34
... language . One but only one of these bits of nonsense would be the attempt to impose on literature a philosophy or to pursue what I have been calling philosophy in literature : to find true or false statements in a use of language that ...
... language . One but only one of these bits of nonsense would be the attempt to impose on literature a philosophy or to pursue what I have been calling philosophy in literature : to find true or false statements in a use of language that ...
Page 50
... language that belonged to what may be called the Romantic language paradigm — the most illustrious proponent of which was probably Wilhelm von Humboldt . Schleier- macher's and Humboldt's linguistic philosophies fell by the wayside when ...
... language that belonged to what may be called the Romantic language paradigm — the most illustrious proponent of which was probably Wilhelm von Humboldt . Schleier- macher's and Humboldt's linguistic philosophies fell by the wayside when ...
Page 123
... language of the author ( and the author's culture ) . Let us turn the screw another spiral . Through a fortuitous happening , the text makes complete sense in the second language . Surely one cannot appeal to the author's sense now ...
... language of the author ( and the author's culture ) . Let us turn the screw another spiral . Through a fortuitous happening , the text makes complete sense in the second language . Surely one cannot appeal to the author's sense now ...
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